Entrepreneurship Tips for Founders: Leadership & Growth
Entrepreneurship is romantic only in retrospect. In the moment, it’s a series of uncomfortable decisions made with incomplete information, most of which you’ll second-guess for months. The good entrepreneurship tips acknowledge that — they don’t promise you a playbook, they give you better questions and a few hard-won heuristics. This hub collects the posts we keep coming back to: the ones about decision-making under pressure, hiring your first real team, and staying sane while you do it.
The guides below sit in four rough buckets: how founders think, how they lead, how they grow a business, and how they survive long enough to see it compound. If you’re in your first year, start with the mindset posts. If you’re past ten employees, the leadership cluster is where the real leverage is.
Entrepreneurship Tips for First-Time Founders
Most first-year failures aren’t product failures — they’re focus failures, cash-flow failures, or the founder simply quitting on themselves in month eight. The entrepreneurship tips here are aimed at that window: how to validate an idea before you quit your job, how to price early, how much runway is actually “enough,” and the specific mistakes repeat founders swear they’ll never make again. None of it replaces doing the work; all of it shortens the education.
Leadership and Building a Team That Does Great Work
The hardest pivot in a founder’s career is from doing the work to leading the people doing the work. You stop being graded on what you produced this week and start being graded on the decisions your team made without you. Our leadership posts cover hiring your first five, firing when it’s obvious three months before you act, running one-on-ones that aren’t status updates, and the quiet art of making yourself progressively less essential.
Growth, Marketing, and Getting Your First 100 Customers
You don’t have a marketing problem until you have a product problem solved. Once you do, the game becomes distribution — the boring, repeatable channels that put your thing in front of the right person at the right moment. These posts cover early growth loops, content as a founder-led channel, sales for people who hate selling, and why most startups would do better with a single channel mastered than five channels half-done.
Habits, Resilience, and the Long Game
The founders who last aren’t the loudest — they’re the ones who sleep, exercise, protect a few close relationships, and have a way to process bad days that doesn’t involve pretending they aren’t bad. Our resilience cluster pulls from interviews with operators who’ve been through it, and covers the specific routines — morning, weekly, quarterly — that keep burnout from cashing in before the business does.
Start by reading one of the guides below — the one that describes the problem on your desk today, not the one you expect to have in a year.
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